Oz & NZ triumph

The NZ premiere of The Age of Stupid was a perfect Kiwi version of the UK premiere. Jam packed with celebs and VIPs, the solar cinema tent in Auckland's viaduct basin attracted more media attention than your average All Blacks game, which is really saying something in rugby mad New Zealand.

Solar panel powering the eventThe traditional Maori welcome set the tone for the night with it's relaxed but genuine and intense message about people coming together to share an important message.

Oxfam and Greenpeace co-hosted the premiere brilliantly co-ordinating all the logistics, volunteers, guest lists and press invites including making the event as low-carbon as possible. They charged the solar panels for two days beforehand to make sure we had enough energy for the premiere itself, and instead of using batteries (inefficient & toxic) we fed the electricity into the grid for 48 hours then drew down the same amount on the night. Top Kiwi actors including Keisha Castle-Hughes (Whalerider & Star Wars) and Lucy Lawless (Xena, the Warrior Princess) arrived by bike rickshaw before walking the green carpet (re-used and re-useable), into the tent. Waste was kept to an absolute minimum and food and drinks were all organic and locally sourced.

Some of The CrewThe green carpet is making a habit of being the diva of our eco premieres, always making a dramatic and late entrance, this time after hours of cleaning and vacuuming by volunteers, but once in place it added a touch of glamour to the site adorned with fairy lights twinkling away with Auckland's skyline in the background.

The Green Carpet

Linking by satellite to the Sydney Premiere was a magic moment when the technology kicked in and suddenly we saw our own green carpet arrivals projected onto the big screen in the tent.

Keisha Castle-Hughes Arriving on the Green Carpet

MC Oliver Driver turned his five minutes of padding into a standup comedy routine, and Noelle McCarty covered all the elements in hosting the Q&A session.

Pelenise from Kiribati stole the show with an emotional speech about the impacts of climate change on her life. "It may be ugly and rocky, but it's my home and I will not leave" she said about her house in Kiribati which could easily be lost to sea level rise.

The press in NZ have covered the story from every angle imaginable with mentions creeping into the columists' vocabulary on a regular basis, and twenty minutes coverage in total on mainstream telly.

Simon McKinney Arriving on the Green Carpet

We were even featured in the 'Party People' pages of todays' Sunday Star Times who said:"HIT: Producer Lizzie Gilett - from Dunedin's regional TV station Channel 9 to global phenomenon.MISS: According to the film, the government's emissions reduction target."

This press coverage is really crucial to get the urgency of the climate crisis across in NZ where the debate about climate change is twenty years behind the UK. Deniers still get a huge amount of airtime and the govt has just announced their pathetic 10-20% target for Copenhagen.

Dunedin, Lizzie's hometown, has gone totally mad for Stupid with huge articles in the press and on the local TV station, a permanent stall at the cinema, a militant facebook campaign and flyers everywhere you look. All of this work has really paid off - Dunners is now the highest selling cinema in all of Australasia!

Lizzie and Lucy Lawless

Lizzie says:"I didn't realise how emotional it would be finally bringing the film home to NZ and premiering it in a tent for my family, friends and fellow Kiwis.

To have our independent political documentary about climate change screening in the most mainstream cinemas around NZ, including my hometown, Dunedin NZ, is a dream come true for our team, thrusting climate change into the Kiwi consciousness in an unforgettable way."

Thank you to everyone involved in the premiere especially Oxfam and Greenpeace for putting it all together.